I am biasing a friends old blackface Fender Super Reverb. I only have the chassis, not the cabinet. I don't have a 2 ohm dummy load only a 4 ohm. If I set bias with the 4 ohm dummy load, will that be correct or will having the higher impedance effect the bias setting?
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does speaker impedance effect bias setting?
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What Tom said ^^^. If you're watching on a 'scope for crossover distortion you may reach a point where you've eliminated it for a 4 ohm load but it will show up with 2 ohms. FWIW I find Super Reverbs lose their crossover notch into 2 ohms at about 35 milliamps, so if you're at that point or a bit beyond, that's where you need to be.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Your math is fine if you believe that 70% "rule." You'll find many of us MEFsters don't subscribe to it. Of course you can listen to the amp at both - or any other - bias setting, find if you can tell the difference. Most sensible folks want to keep the heat down, get some more life out of the output tubes. I can only guess the 70% crowd have no scopes and don't trust their ears, they choose to run the bias unnecessarily high just to make sure they're out of the crossover distortion zone.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Hey Leo,
Did I hear wrong, or does part of the determination of bias point have to do with where you run the amp at? As in, one bias setting might work great if you keepnthe volume on 3, but if you legitimately play on 10 all the time, the best operation point may change? I don't remember which way does what, but, I just thought I remembered that.
Justin"Wow it's red! That doesn't look like the standard Marshall red. It's more like hooker lipstick/clown nose/poodle pecker red." - Chuck H. -
"Of course that means playing **LOUD** , best but useless solution to modern sissy snowflake players." - J.M. Fahey -
"All I ever managed to do with that amp was... kill small rodents within a 50 yard radius of my practice building." - Tone Meister -
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Originally posted by Justin Thomas View PostHey Leo,
Did I hear wrong, or does part of the determination of bias point have to do with where you run the amp at? As in, one bias setting might work great if you keepnthe volume on 3, but if you legitimately play on 10 all the time, the best operation point may change? I don't remember which way does what, but, I just thought I remembered that.
JustinIf it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey
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Originally posted by Justin Thomas View PostHey Leo, Did I hear wrong, or does part of the determination of bias point have to do with where you run the amp at? As in, one bias setting might work great if you keepnthe volume on 3, but if you legitimately play on 10 all the time, the best operation point may change? I don't remember which way does what, but, I just thought I remembered that. Justin
Volume on 10 all the time still doesn't tell me much. Some players would just honk away full blast, the better ones use their volume controls & fingers to get dynamic variety. Unless instructed differently I set the bias just past the point the crossover notch disappears, you can see it on the scope and hear it too with a sine test wave. Add maybe another 10% for good measure and that's enough. With some amp/tube combinations surprise it's only 50% dissipation - sometimes a little less. Other amp/tube combinations I have to go 90%, AC30 anybody?This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Jeez Leo, when did you "MEFsters" become such amp guru snobs, Ha!
Most sensible folks want to keep the heat down, get some more life out of the output tubes. I can only guess the 70% crowd have no scopes and don't trust their ears, they choose to run the bias unnecessarily high just to make sure they're out of the crossover distortion zone.
70% is not a "rule" as we all know when dealing with all the amp variables, just used it for the math. Notch distortion is probably the least accurate method to bias a tube amplifier circuit (not going into it here), I've tried. 45 years of working with TV and radio circuits, I started with an EICO 425 scope, then on to Tektronix analog and now digital scopes.
I was wanting to make sure OT secondary impedance mismatch didn't effect the bias point as this would present the tube plates with a different reflected primary impedance. As I said in my post, I only have the chassis, no cabinet, no speakers. I'm sorry if I offended you with my question. Wish you all the best, Tim
BTW Tom, looking on Leo's original schematic. He shows 460v at the plates, so I would assume with modern wall voltages the +10v difference would be about right.Last edited by 5thumbs; 01-13-2017, 05:52 AM.
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Originally posted by 5thumbs View PostI am biasing a friends old blackface Fender Super Reverb. I only have the chassis, not the cabinet. I don't have a 2 ohm dummy load only a 4 ohm. If I set bias with the 4 ohm dummy load, will that be correct or will having the higher impedance effect the bias setting?
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Originally posted by Dave H View PostIf using the cross over notch method, from my (very limited) experience using a higher impedance dummy load than the amp is set for will reduce the cross over distortion visible on the scope but the amp doesn't see a fixed impedance at a single frequency. It sees the graph below so how accurate can the cross over notch method be?
Originally posted by 5thumbs70% is not a "rule" as we all know when dealing with all the amp variables, just used it for the math.
Notch distortion is probably the least accurate method to bias a tube amplifier circuit
Offended, heck no, I got better things to get offended about, mostly not on MEF.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Sorry for the late response, I got busy! This is how Randall Aiken explains the main issues I have encountered - The Last Word On Biasing
Biasing by the crossover distortion method as indicated in the Pittman book and other literature is inaccurate because the point at which crossover distortion appears is very hard to detect and is subject to changes with load impedance, amount of negative feedback, and, in particular, with grid drive if the phase inverter is AC coupled to the output tube grids (as it is in almost all guitar amps).
Also, If you have two class AB amplifiers, one with a plate voltage of 350V, the other with a plate voltage of 550V, and set them both using this method, the amplifier with the 350V plate voltage usually will be biased too cold, while the amp with the 550V plate voltage will usually be biased too hot.
In TV/Radio amp circuits biasing is set for tube life, customers didn't want to continually replace expensive tubes. But guitarist are willing to sacrifice tube longevity for better tone. The datasheet books were all geared towards the more conservative TV/Radio parameters. The first time inside a Fender Deluxe Reverb, I was convinced the 6V6's were ready to explode at any moment as most 6v6 circuits I'd encountered to that point never had more than 350v max on their plates ;-)
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By this arguement, most Fender amps of the 'classic' era were biased to degrade the tone. I don't think this is true. 70% is very hot compared to how they came out of the factory. Same for many amps still being manufactured today.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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